Wet Concentration of Fine Coal

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Michael Sokaski M. R. Geer H. F. Yancey W. Deurbrouck E. R. Palowitch R. E. Zimmerman S. C. Sun
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
90
File Size:
2996 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

PART 1: DENSE MEDIUM SEPARATION by M. SOKASKI, M. R. GEER and H. F. YANCEY INTRODUCTION In the early days of coarse-coal treatment by the dense-medium process in Europe, loess was one of the materials used for medium solids. Newly developed cyclones were used to reclaim and thicken :he loess suspension. On occasion, when the cyclone thickener at the Maurits mine in the Netherlands plugged, the overflow was found to be filled with clean coal free of impurity. From this observation stemmed the concept of the cyclone as a cleaning device. Development took place during World War 11 in the laboratory of the Dutch State Mines under the direction of M. G. Driessen. A 15-ton-per-hour pilot plant was in operation in the laboratory by 1945, when, in September, Driessen made the first public disclosure of the process in a paper presented to the Institute of Fuel in London. In April 1945,2 operation of this pilot plant was observed by one of the authors, who was so impressed with the potential of the cyclone process that, on his return to the United States, a research program on the cyclone was started by the Bureau of Mines immediately. This work led to an AIME paper in 1946 in which the first details of cyclone operation on American coals was made available. Commercial adoption of the cyclone proceeded in Europe, initially in the Netherlands, Germany, and France. In the United States, where coal is less costly and most of the coals are so easy to clean they respond well to simpler cleaning systems, the first cyclone plant was not built until 1961.3 As of the spring of 1967, a total of 31 commercial cy- clone plants had been installed or were under construction in the United States; this does not include eight Dynawhirlpool plants. The capacity of the cyclone plants ranges from 50 to 1300 tons per hour and totals 6600. THEORY Before discussing the theory of a dense medium cyclone, a brief description may be helpful to some readers who are not familiar with its basic operation. In a typical dense-medium cyclone, illustrated in figure 10-1, the mixture of medium and raw coal enters tangentially near the top of the cylindrical section, thus forming a strong vertical flow. The refuse moves along the wall of the cyclone and is discharged through the under- flow orifice. The washed coal moves toward the longitudinal axis of the cyclone and passes through the vortex finder to the overflow chamber.
Citation

APA: Michael Sokaski M. R. Geer H. F. Yancey W. Deurbrouck E. R. Palowitch R. E. Zimmerman S. C. Sun  (1968)  Wet Concentration of Fine Coal

MLA: Michael Sokaski M. R. Geer H. F. Yancey W. Deurbrouck E. R. Palowitch R. E. Zimmerman S. C. Sun Wet Concentration of Fine Coal. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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